Milwaukee Co. Zoo’s Wynter predicts spring will arrive early

This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated.

Please enable Javascript to watch this video

MILWAUKEE -- The Milwaukee County Zoo's resident ground hog, Wynter, took center stage Thursday morning and did not see her shadow. Therefore, according to Wynter, we can expect an early spring.

Wynter is a 4-year-old female (her estimated birth date is April 2008), who arrived at the Zoo in October 2009 from the Boonshoft Museum of Discovery in Dayton, Ohio. A rehabilitated animal, Wynter was found orphaned on a roadside at approximately five weeks of age. At the Boonshoft Museum of Discovery, Wynter served as an educational animal for the museum’s hands-on learning activities offered for children.

If Wynter had seen her shadow, she would have returned to her burrow for six more weeks of winter (or so legend has it).

In Sun Prairie, Jimmy the ground hog also did not see his shadow Thursday morning.

Jimmy's prognostication differs from Punxsutawney Phil. After Phil was summoned from his burrow at the Gobbler's Knob hill in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, observers proclaimed that "the prognosticator of all prognosticators" had seen his shadow.

"Many shadows do I see, six more weeks of winter it must be," a member of Phil's "Inner Circle" said as a crowd erupted in boos.

If you'd like to learn more about the tradition of Ground Hog's Day, CLICK HERE to read some interesting history in a blog post from FOX6 Chief Meteorologist Vince Condella.